Nemawashi Diapositivas Definiciones
Nemawashi Diapositivas Definiciones
Nemawashi Diapositivas Definiciones
Mike Micklewright
QualityQuest, Inc.
Arlington Heights, IL
mike@mikemick.com
847-401-0442
Mike Micklewright
Degreed Engineer from U. of Illinois
Worked at Saturn and Seaquist
15 Years Independent Lean and Quality
Consultant/Trainer
Keynote Presenter
AME Board Member
4 ASQ Certifications
Comedian, Actor, and Impersonator (representing some
of my personalities)
Author (“Whys Guy” in Quality Digest Magazine and “Out
of Another @#^&! Crisis!”)
Agenda
1) Definition
2) What Saturn Taught
3) The Toyota Way
4) Thorough Consideration in Decision Making
5) Broadly Consider Alternative Solutions with a Set-Based Approach
6) Where does this Fit in with the A3 Process?
7) The Process to Achieve Nemawashi
1) Identify the Stakeholders
2) Determine Customer Requirements
3) Concept Selection (part 1)
4) How to Reach Consensus
5) Generating Concepts
6) Benchmarking
7) Concept Selection (part 2)
8) Synergize for Further Improvement
9) Implementation Plan
Definition
Nemawashi
Benchmarking and Concept Selection are the tools that can be used to
fulfill the principle of Nemawashi.
Years later, I used the following two slides to
teach people about the required process
of Advanced Product Quality Planning, or
APQP, used in the American Automotive
Industry.
RE-DESIGN
DAYS TO MARKET
600
500 RE-TEST
400 RE-DESIGN
300 RE-TEST
200 RE-DESIGN
100 TEST
0 DESIGN
100:1
10:1
1:1
½:1
The Toyota Way
by Jeffrey Liker
There are strong relationships between all of Deming’s 14 Points and all 14 Principles
of The Toyota Way.
The Toyota Way –
Process
2. Create continuous process flow to bring problems to the
surface
3. Use “pull’ systems to avoid overproduction
4. Level out the workload (Heijunka)
5. Build a culture of stopping to fix problems, to get quality
right the first time
6. Standardized tasks are the foundation of continuous
improvement and employee empowerment
7. Use visual controls so no problems are hidden
8. Use only reliable, thoroughly tested technology that
serves your people and processes
The Toyota Way –
People and Partners
9. Grow leaders who thoroughly understand
the work, live the philosophy, and teach it
to others
10. Develop exceptional people and teams
who follow your company’s philosophy
11. Respect your extended network of
partners and suppliers by challenging
them and helping them improve
The Toyota Way -
Problem Solving
12. Go and see for yourself to thoroughly
understand the situation (genchi genbutsu)
13. Make decisions slowly by consensus,
thoroughly considering all options;
implement decisions rapidly
14. Become a learning organization through
relentless reflection (Hansei) and
continuous improvement (Kaizen)
Principle 13:
Problem Solving
(Continuous
Improvement and
Learning)
Process
(Eliminate Waste)
Philosophy
(Long Term Thinking)
This is where it fits in on the form (which again, is one small part of
the overall A3 process)
It occurs after Root Cause Analysis (RCA)
This class does not cover the extremely important process of RCA
Where does this fit in with the A3
Process?
The more important part of the A3 process is the
leading, questioning, coaching, teaching, and
mentoring process that occurs.
Dr. Deming’s Principle # 7: “Institute leadership.
The aim of leadership should be to help people
and machines and gadgets to do a better job
Dr. Deming’s Principle # 13: “Institute a vigorous
program of education and self-improvement”
The Process to Achieve
Nemawashi
1) Identify the Stakeholders
2) Determine Customer Requirements
3) Concept Selection (part 1)
4) How to Reach Consensus
5) Generating Concepts
6) Benchmarking
7) Concept Selection (part 2)
8) Synergize for Further Improvement
9) Implementation Plan
Internal
Sister companies, departments, work cells
i.e. cycle times, quality levels, absenteeism, internal auditing
Inexpensive, easy to get info/data, no external focus
Process oriented
6) Benchmarking
Competitive
Your industry and product lines
i.e. customer performance metrics and future
expectations
Hard to get/see information, valuable when received;
does not require conceptual thinking
Articles, former employees, trade reports, see below
Product and Process oriented
Product – tear downs, reverse engineering, Mona Lisa,
competitive vehicle trip
Process – genchi genbutsu, plant trips (if ever possible)
7) Concept Selection (part 2)
Team members present and define each concepts so all team
members clearly understand each concept and so that each can be
fairly evaluated.
Provide drawings, sketches, brochures, etc. if applicable.
Choose the datum concept (if possible and applicable)
If there is an existing concept that is currently in use, choose this
concept as the datum.
If not, choose the concept that most people are familiar with as the
datum.
Place the datum concept into the first column to the right of the Weight
column. See example.
Do not use a datum (tougher to do)
Places the other concepts into the columns to the right of the Datum
column.
CRITERIA IMPORTANCE CONCEPT 1 CONCEPT 2 CONCEPT 3 CONCEPT 4
RATING CURRENT DESIGN
Ease of Assembly 4 D
Maintainability 3
Serviceability 2 A
Ease of Use 5
Ease of Cleaning 1 T
Initial Cost 4
On-Going Cost 3 U
Proven Technology 2
TOTAL:
DECISION:
7) Concept Selection (part 2)
The team makes a commitment to each other
that the concepts do not belong to any one
individual or smaller team. There is no
ownership.
Ease of Assembly 4 D S S +
Maintainability 3 + - -
Serviceability 2 A + - -
Ease of Use 5 S S +
Ease of Cleaning 1 T S ++ S
Initial Cost 4 S - ++
On-Going Cost 3 U - S +
Proven Technology 2 ++ - +
TOTAL:
DECISION:
7) Concept Selection (part 2)
Computes the totals for each concept (column) by
Multiplying the Weight and the Evaluation Rating for each criterion and
adding up the totals
If “ease of assembly” had an importance rating of “4” and the concept
was much better (++) than the datum, then it would receive an “8+”
If “proven technology” had an importance rating of “2”and the concept
was the same (S) as the datum, it would receive a “0”
The total is added up for each column.
The concept with the highest positive score is the best choice.
If this was a choice of purchasing an item or choosing a supplier and the
team cannot change these concepts, then the team’s decision is
complete. If the team does have an influence on the design, proceed to
the next step.
CRITERIA IMPORTANCE CONCEPT 1 CONCEPT 2 CONCEPT 3 CONCEPT 4
RATING CURRENT DESIGN
Ease of Assembly 4 D S S +
Maintainability 3 + - -
Serviceability 2 A + - -
Ease of Use 5 S S +
Ease of Cleaning 1 T S ++ S
Initial Cost 4 S - ++
On-Going Cost 3 U - S +
Proven Technology 2 ++ - +
M
TOTAL: 0 +6 -9 +17
DECISION: √
8) Synergize for Further
Improvement
Choose the highest scoring concept as the base and highlights its deficiencies when
compared to the other concepts.
Modify the base concept by extracting ideas from the other concepts and attempting
to institute them into the base concept.
Place the synergized concept into the final column and leads the team in evaluating
the concept as was previously done.
In this case, the team borrowed design attributes from Concept 2 with regard to
Serviceability and Maintainability and improved Concept #4
Ease of Assembly 4 D S S + +
Maintainability 3 + - - +
Serviceability 2 A + - - +
Ease of Use 5 S S + +
Ease of Cleaning 1 T S ++ S +
Initial Cost 4 S - ++ ++
On-Going Cost 3 U - S + +
Proven 2 ++ - + +
Technology
TOTAL: +6 -9 +17 + 28
DECISION: √
9) Implementation Plan
Gain management approval to move on
The next step in an A3 process is to develop the
implementation plan.
If it is a complex project, it is possible to develop
multiple implementation plan concepts and go
through the same process
Implement Rapidly
What is Achieved?
Far more important than the sound
decision that was made through
Nemawshi is
A great deal of learning up front is achieved
before any thing is even planned or
implemented
Toyota’s greatest accomplishment –
becoming a true learning organization!!
Questions and Answers
Monthly Newsletter? Contact Me ….
mike@mikemick.com, 847-401-0442
Services Offered
Developing Deming Based Management Systems
Anything Lean (inc. Lean Culture, Lean Maturity Assessments,
A3, TWI, Nemawashi)
Anything Quality (inc. ISO Based QMS’s, FMEA, SPC, DOE)
Root Cause Analysis Training
Leaning out your QMS Documentation
Customized Training and Consulting
Keynote Presentations